Niche Inspector: Where Is The Demand?

Niche Inspector, at it’s simplest, is a quick way of doing niche market research with an approach that lets you uncover hundreds of hidden niches that other methods miss. Looking deeper, it has many features that let you control how you filter the potential niches it finds. Today, I look at its basic data collection process and especially the demand component.

Niche Inspector adopts a simple approach to searching for potential niche markets. You point it in the right direction, and it will go and collect related demand, competition and potential profit data in a grid with every search, sort, and filter option you will ever need. If you don’t know what direction to send it in, it will even go off and find it’s own suggestions.

It does this quicker than any comparative tool that I’ve ever used. Results normally come back immediately, but even when there are those inevitable delays you get querying live data over the internet, you can always see where you are. Rather than a silly message or useless moving timer, you can see real live data appearing, which you can start to review through the unique multi-threaded interface.

Niche Inspector Demand

By default, Niche Inspector fetches demand from Overture. Critics argue that Overture is buggy and inferior to WordTracker, but you can easily add WordTracker data if you want. In my experience, it is much better to be able to quickly focus on potential high demand markets than waste time arguing about the merits of one version against another. Remember, demand is only one factor and it will change over time. Worrying too much about whether demand is truly 10,000 or 8,500 is pointless. I like the Niche Inspector way, and it works - quickly dismissing ideas with too little demand, and quickly saving potential niches as new projects.

Of course, if Niche Inspector only helped you build a database of high demand keywords, it would not be worth much consideration. It’s a great start though, and leads seamlessly into the all important filtering options that I cover in my Free Using Niche Inspector Tips.

If you have any questions about using Niche Inspector, please comment below or on my Contact Page. Remember, most questions about how and why using Niche Inspector works so well are answered in the Free Niche Keyword Report.

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